Why rowdy balls beat Tinder for love in Australia’s Outback
The Bachelor and Spinster ball is a booze-fuelled Australian bush tradition which attracts young men and women from remote farms or scattered, tiny villages for whom swiping right is not an option

Pick-up trucks, cowboy boots and a 24-hour booze-fuelled party in the Outback: welcome to modern-day dating in Australia’s bush, where swiping right is not an option.
For single men and women on remote farms or in tiny villages, “Bachelor and Spinster” balls offer a better chance of finding love than dating apps like Tinder.
The balls, a decades-old tradition in outback Australia, still attract thousands of young adults looking for love – or to get rolling drunk.
“It’s very old-school,” says Emily Pitt, a 24-year-old from the former gold rush town of Gulgong.
“It’s how country singles meet each other because you’re rural and there’s hundreds of kilometres between you.”
